The Morning Call

Falls overboard a nightmare for cruise ships, passengers

- By Maria Cramer

The Carnival Valor had been at sea for only a day when calls came over the loudspeake­r asking a certain passenger to please report to customer service.

The man, a 28-year-old American citizen, had been reported missing by his family that morning.

It was Thanksgivi­ng, and the Valor, a 3,756-passenger cruise ship that had left New Orleans the day before, was heading toward Cozumel, Mexico.

The passenger, according to the Coast Guard, turned out to be James Grimes, 28, who had been traveling with his parents and siblings on the five-day cruise. His family had last seen him the night before, around 11 p.m.

At 8:10 p.m., more than nine hours after his family reported him missing, a passing tanker spotted the man near the mouth of the Mississipp­i River and alerted the Coast Guard.

Rescuers found Grimes

struggling in the water, waving franticall­y and trying to keep his head above the surface.

When the helicopter crew lifted him out, he was in shock, had mild hypothermi­a and was extremely dehydrated, said Lt. Seth Gross, who managed the

search and rescue operation for the Coast Guard. But he was alive and in stable condition.

Grimes, whose family described him as an exceptiona­l swimmer, had treaded in 65- to 70-degree water for hours, withstandi­ng rain,

20-knot winds and three- to five-foot waves in the Gulf

of Mexico, where sharks are common, Coast Guard officials said.

“This case is certainly extraordin­ary,” Gross said. “The survival instinct, the will to survive is just crazy.”

Just how often does this happen?

Falling from a ship into a vast sea might be a cruise passenger’s worst nightmare. While the chances of going overboard are exceedingl­y remote, according to statistics from the Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n (CLIA), the outcome is usually tragic.

In 2019, 25 people fell overboard, and just nine of them were rescued, according to CLIA.

Alcohol is a factor in at least 11% of falls from cruise ships, which often offer all-inclusive drink packages that encourage drinking onboard, said Ross Klein, a professor of social work at Memorial University of Newfoundla­nd, who researches cruise safety.

So how do ships prevent people from going overboard?

By law, railings have to be 42 inches tall, Klein said. There were efforts to make the railings taller by about another foot, he said, after Congress began considerin­g legislatio­n to tighten security on ships in 2005. But in 2010, when Congress passed the Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act, the railing height

requiremen­ts were set at the current standard, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States